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1.
Food Chem Toxicol ; 162: 112894, 2022 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35219765

Nitrous oxide (N2O) toxicity is a concern common to several medical fields. Here, retrospective study of four N2O abuses with neurological signs in the emergency practice provides a preliminary basis for a metabolic Discussion/Review. This latter highlights N2O abuse as pathology of DNA/RNA/protein methylations, for instance consistent with impairments of protein arginine methyltransferases involved in myelinogenesis and myelopathy in patients. Basically, pathogenesis starts with oxidation by N2O of coordinated cobalamine cobalt ions at enzyme sites with impairments of vitamin-B12-dependent pathways. Methionine synthase (methylcobalamine) and methymalonyl-CoA mutase (adenosylcobalamine) are inactivated and cofactor-depleted, respectively. The number of impacted pathways (folate cycle, methylation cycle, S-adenosylmethionine-dependent methyltransferases, transulfuration pathway, Krebs cycle fueling by methylmalonyl-CoA, glutathione synthesis) explains the variety of potential research/laboratory markers, and may provide new clues and future angles to explore N2O toxicity. Overall, homocysteine measurements obviously help diagnosis of N2O abuses. Additional markers may include vitamin-B12, methionine, methylmalonate, dimethylglycine, sarcosine, S-adenosylmethionine to S-adenosylhomocysteine ratio, various S-adenosylamino acids, S-adenosylmethionine-dependent cellular methylations, and additional analytes (propionylcarnitine, propionylglycine, cystathionine and derived metabolites, methylated amino acids [eg arginine], betaine).

2.
Biochimie ; 190: 20-23, 2021 Nov.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34228977

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a longstanding issue in clinical practice and metabolic research. New clues in better understanding the pathogenesis of HCC might relate to the metabolic context in patients with citrin (aspartate-glutamate carrier 1) deficiency (CD). Because citrin-deficient liver (CDL) is subject to HCC, it represents a unique metabolic model to highlight the mechanisms of HCC promotion, offering different angles of study than the classical metabolic syndrome/obesity/non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)/HCC study axis. In turn, the metabolic features of HCC could shed light on the pathogenesis of CDL. Among these, HCC-induced re-activation of aralar-1 (aspartate-glutamate carrier 2), physiologically not expressed in the adult liver, might take place in CDL, so gene redundancy for mitochondrial aspartate-glutamate carriers would be exploited by the CDL. This proposed (aralar-1 re-activation) and known (citrate/malate cycle) adaptive mechanisms may substitute for the impaired function in CD and are consistent with the clinical remission stage of CD and CD improvement by medium-chain triglycerides (MCT). However, these metabolic adaptive benefits could also promote HCC development. In CD, as a result of PPARα down-regulation, liver mitochondrial fatty acid-derived acetyl-CoA would, like glucose-derived acetyl-CoA, be used for lipid anabolism and fuel nuclear acetylation events which might trigger aralar-1 re-activation as seen in non-CD HCC. A brief account of these metabolic events which might lead to aralar-1 re-activation in CDL is here given. Consistency of this account for CDL events further relies on the protective roles of PPARα and inhibition of mitochondrial and plasma membrane citrate transporters in non-CD HCC.


Calcium-Binding Proteins/deficiency , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/etiology , Liver Neoplasms/etiology , Mitochondrial Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Organic Anion Transporters/deficiency , Acetyl Coenzyme A/metabolism , Amino Acid Transport Systems, Acidic/metabolism , Animals , Antiporters/metabolism , Humans , NAD/metabolism , Triglycerides/metabolism
6.
Cell Death Dis ; 9(3): 325, 2018 02 27.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29487283

Targeted therapies as BRAF and MEK inhibitor combination have been approved as first-line treatment for BRAF-mutant melanoma. However, disease progression occurs in most of the patients within few months of therapy. Metabolic adaptations have been described in the context of acquired resistance to BRAF inhibitors (BRAFi). BRAFi-resistant melanomas are characterized by an increase of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation and are more prone to cell death induced by mitochondrial-targeting drugs. BRAFi-resistant melanomas also exhibit an enhancement of oxidative stress due to mitochondrial oxygen consumption increase. To understand the mechanisms responsible for survival of BRAFi-resistant melanoma cells in the context of oxidative stress, we have established a preclinical murine model that accurately recapitulates in vivo the acquisition of resistance to MAPK inhibitors including several BRAF or MEK inhibitors alone and in combination. Using mice model and melanoma cell lines generated from mice tumors, we have confirmed that the acquisition of resistance is associated with an increase in mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation as well as the importance of glutamine metabolism. Moreover, we have demonstrated that BRAFi-resistant melanoma can adapt mitochondrial metabolism to support glucose-derived glutamate synthesis leading to increase in glutathione content. Besides, BRAFi-resistant melanoma exhibits a strong activation of NRF-2 pathway leading to increase in the pentose phosphate pathway, which is involved in the regeneration of reduced glutathione, and to increase in xCT expression, a component of the xc-amino acid transporter essential for the uptake of cystine required for intracellular glutathione synthesis. All these metabolic modifications sustain glutathione level and contribute to the intracellular redox balance to allow survival of BRAFi-resistant melanoma cells.


Antioxidants/metabolism , Drug Resistance, Neoplasm , Glucose/metabolism , MAP Kinase Signaling System/drug effects , Melanoma/metabolism , Melanoma/pathology , NF-E2-Related Factor 2/metabolism , Protein Kinase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Animals , Cell Line, Tumor , Disease Models, Animal , Drug Resistance, Neoplasm/drug effects , Female , Glutamates/biosynthesis , Glutathione/biosynthesis , Humans , Mice, SCID , Mitochondria/drug effects , Mitochondria/metabolism , Oxidative Phosphorylation/drug effects , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism
7.
Mol Genet Metab ; 123(4): 463-471, 2018 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29478817

Creatine transporter is currently the focus of renewed interest with emerging roles in brain neurotransmission and physiology, and the bioenergetics of cancer metastases. We here report on amendments of a standard creatine uptake assay which might help clinical chemistry laboratories to extend their current range of measurements of creatine and metabolites in body fluids to functional enzyme explorations. In this respect, short incubation times and the use of a stable-isotope-labeled substrate (D3-creatine) preceded by a creatine wash-out step from cultured fibroblast cells by removal of fetal bovine serum (rich in creatine) from the incubation medium are recommended. Together, these measures decreased, by a first order of magnitude, creatine concentrations in the incubation medium at the start of creatine-uptake studies and allowed to functionally discriminate between 4 hemizygous male and 4 heterozygous female patients with X-linked SLC6A8 deficiency, and between this cohort of eight patients and controls. The functional assay corroborated genetic diagnosis of SLC6A8 deficiency. Gene anomalies in our small cohort included splicing site (c.912G > A [p.Ile260_Gln304del], c.778-2A > G and c.1495 + 2 T > G), substitution (c.407C > T) [p.Ala136Val] and deletion (c.635_636delAG [p.Glu212Valfs*84] and c.1324delC [p.Gln442Lysfs*21]) variants with reduced creatine transporter function validating their pathogenicity, including that of a previously unreported c.1324delC variant. The present assay adaptations provide an easy, reliable and discriminative manner for exploring creatine transporter activity and disease variations. It might apply to drug testing or other evaluations in the genetic and metabolic horizons covered by the emerging functions of creatine and its transporter, in a way, however, requiring and completed by additional studies on female patients and blood-brain barrier permeability properties of selected compounds. As a whole, the proposed assay of creatine transporter positively adds to currently existing measurements of this transporter activity, and determining on a large scale the extent of its exact suitability to detect female patients should condition in the future its transfer in clinical practice.


Brain Diseases, Metabolic, Inborn/metabolism , Creatine/deficiency , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Mental Retardation, X-Linked/metabolism , Mutation , Nerve Tissue Proteins/deficiency , Nerve Tissue Proteins/genetics , Plasma Membrane Neurotransmitter Transport Proteins/deficiency , Adolescent , Brain Diseases, Metabolic, Inborn/genetics , Brain Diseases, Metabolic, Inborn/pathology , Case-Control Studies , Child , Child, Preschool , Cohort Studies , Creatine/genetics , Creatine/metabolism , Female , Fibroblasts/pathology , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Infant , Male , Mental Retardation, X-Linked/genetics , Mental Retardation, X-Linked/pathology , Plasma Membrane Neurotransmitter Transport Proteins/genetics , Plasma Membrane Neurotransmitter Transport Proteins/metabolism , Prognosis
8.
Mol Genet Metab ; 123(4): 441-448, 2018 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29478820

Carnitine palmitoyltransferase type 2 (CPT2) deficiency, a mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation disorder (MFAOD), is a cause of myopathy in its late clinical presentation. As for other MFAODs, its diagnosis may be evocated when blood acylcarnitine profile is abnormal. However, a lack of abnormalities or specificity in this profile is not exclusive of CPT2 deficiency. Our retrospective study reports clinical and biological data in a cohort of 11 patients with circulating acylcarnitine profile unconclusive enough for a specific diagnosis orientation. In these patients, CPT2 gene studies was prompted by prior fluxomic explorations of mitochondrial ß-oxidation on intact whole blood cells incubated with pentadeuterated ([16-2H3, 15-2H2])-palmitate. Clinical indication for fluxomic explorations was at least one acute rhabdomyolysis episode complicated, in 5 of 11 patients, by acute renal failure. Major trigger of rhabdomyolysis was febrile infection. In all patients, fluxomic data indicated deficient CPT2 function showing normal deuterated palmitoylcarnitine (C16-Cn) formation rates associated with increased ratios between generated C16-Cn and downstream deuterated metabolites (Σ deuterated C2-Cn to C14-Cn). Subsequent gene studies showed in all patients pathogenic gene variants in either homozygous or compound heterozygous forms. Consistent with literature data, allelic frequency of the c.338C > T[p.Ser113Leu] mutation amounted to 68.2% in our cohort. Other missense mutations included c.149C > A[p.Pro50His] (9%), c.200C > G[p.Ala200Gly] (4.5%) and previously unreported c.1171A > G[p.ser391Gly] (4.5%) and c.1420G > C[p.Ala474Pro] (4.5%) mutations. Frameshift c.1666-1667delTT[p.Leu556val*16] mutation (9%) was observed in two patients unknown to be related.


Biomarkers/blood , Carnitine O-Palmitoyltransferase/deficiency , Metabolism, Inborn Errors/diagnosis , Muscular Diseases/diagnosis , Palmitic Acid/blood , Adolescent , Adult , Carnitine O-Palmitoyltransferase/blood , Carnitine O-Palmitoyltransferase/genetics , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Infant , Male , Metabolic Flux Analysis , Metabolism, Inborn Errors/blood , Metabolism, Inborn Errors/genetics , Middle Aged , Muscular Diseases/blood , Muscular Diseases/genetics , Mutation , Oxidation-Reduction , Prognosis , Retrospective Studies , Young Adult
9.
Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol ; 16(6): 908-917.e2, 2018 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29258901

BACKGROUND & AIMS: The gastrointestinal form of acute graft vs host disease increases morbidity and mortality following allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation. Plasma levels of citrulline, a non-proteinogenic amino acid, indicate functional enterocyte mass. We measured citrulline in patients before allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation and investigated its association with incidence and severity of gastrointestinal graft vs host disease. METHODS: We performed a retrospective study with 191 patients (69 women, 122 men; median age of 52 years) who underwent allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation for hematological malignancies at a tertiary center of France from January 2013 through April 2015. Levels of citrulline in plasma samples collected 30 days before graft infusion were measured by high performance liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry. We assigned patients to groups with a high level of citrulline (>26 µmol/L) or low level of citrulline (≤26 µmol/L). The primary outcomes were difference between groups in incidence of stage 2-4 gastrointestinal graft vs host disease, death without hematological disease relapse (non-relapse mortality), relapse of the hematological disease, and overall survival through 2 years after transplantation. RESULTS: Ninety-six patients (50%) developed acute graft vs host disease and 37 (19%) developed a gastrointestinal form. Among patients with gastrointestinal involvement, 33 patients (89%) had stage 2-4 gastrointestinal graft vs host disease. In univariable analysis, low level of citrulline associated with higher cumulative incidence of stage 2-4 gastrointestinal graft vs host disease, non-relapse mortality, and shorter overall survival. In multivariable analysis, low level of citrulline was the only risk factor independently associated with stage 2-4 gastrointestinal graft vs host disease (hazard ratio, 3.06; 95% CI, 1.37-6.85; P = .007); it also associated with increased non-relapse mortality (hazard ratio, 2.29; 95% CI, 1.24-4.22; P = .008). CONCLUSIONS: In a retrospective study with 191 patients, we associated a low plasma level of citrulline before allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation with a higher risk for stage 2-4 gastrointestinal graft vs host disease and non-relapse mortality. This marker might be used to manage patients before allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation.


Citrulline/blood , Gastrointestinal Diseases/pathology , Graft vs Host Disease/pathology , Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation/adverse effects , Transplantation, Homologous/adverse effects , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Female , France , Hematologic Neoplasms/therapy , Humans , Incidence , Male , Middle Aged , Plasma/chemistry , Retrospective Studies , Severity of Illness Index , Survival Analysis , Tertiary Care Centers , Young Adult
10.
Clin Chim Acta ; 471: 101-106, 2017 Aug.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28532786

BACKGROUND: Despite ACADS (acyl-CoA dehydrogenase, short-chain) gene susceptibility variants (c.511C>T and c.625G>A) are considered to be non-pathogenic, encoded proteins are known to exhibit altered kinetics. Whether or not, they might affect overall fatty acid ß-oxidation still remains, however, unclear. METHODS: De novo biosynthesis of acylcarnitines by whole blood samples incubated with deuterated palmitate (16-2H3,15-2H2-palmitate) is suitable as a fluxomic exploration to distinguish between normal and disrupted ß-oxidation, abnormal profiles and ratios of acylcarnitines with different chain-lengths being indicative of the site for enzymatic blockade. Determinations in 301 control subjects of ratios between deuterated butyrylcarnitine and sum of deuterated C2 to C14 acylcarnitines served here as reference values to state specifically functional SCAD impairment in patients addressed for clinical and/or biological suspicion of a ß-oxidation disorder. RESULTS: Functional SCAD impairment was found in 39 patients. The 27 patients accepting subsequent gene studies were all positive for ACADS mutations. Twenty-six of 27 patients were positive for c.625G>A variant. Twenty-three of 27 patients harbored susceptibility variants as sole ACADS alterations (18 homozygous and 3 heterozygous for c.625G>A, 2 compound heterozygous for c.625G>A/c.511C>T). CONCLUSION: Our present fluxomic assessment of SCAD suggests a link between ACADS susceptibility variants and abnormal ß-oxidation consistent with known altered kinetics of these variants.


Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase/genetics , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Metabolic Flux Analysis , Mitochondria/metabolism , Palmitic Acid/metabolism , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase/deficiency , Child, Preschool , Female , Genotype , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Oxidation-Reduction , Phenotype
11.
Anal Biochem ; 528: 57-62, 2017 07 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28456637

High resolution oxymetry study (HROS) of skeletal muscle usually requires 90-120 min preparative phase (dissection, permeabilization and washing). This work reports on the suitability of a rapid muscle preparation which by-passes this long preparation. For a few seconds only, muscle biopsy from pigs is submitted to gentle homogenization at 8000 rotations per minute using an ultra-dispersor apparatus. Subsequent HROS is performed using FCCP instead of ADP, compounds crossing and not plasma membrane, respectively. This simplified procedure compares favorably with classical (permeabilized fibers) HROS in terms of respiratory chain complex activities. Mitochondria from cells undergoing ultradispersion were functionally preserved as attested by relative inefficacy of added cytochrome C (not crossing intact mitochondrial outer membrane) to stimulate mitochondrial respiration. Responsiveness of respiration to ADP (in the absence of FCCP) suggested that these intact mitochondria were outside cells disrupted by ultradispersion or within cells permeated by this procedure.


Cell Respiration , Mitochondria, Muscle/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Oxygen Consumption , Animals , Biopsy , Electron Transport , Electron Transport Chain Complex Proteins/metabolism , Female , Mitochondrial Membranes/metabolism , Muscle Fibers, Skeletal/metabolism , Permeability , Swine
12.
Biol Blood Marrow Transplant ; 23(6): 913-921, 2017 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28263922

During conditioning, intestinal damage induces microbial translocation which primes macrophage reactivity and leads to donor-derived T cell stimulation. Little is known about the role of intestinal health and macrophage reactivity before conditioning in the development of acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) in patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT). We assessed (1) citrulline, a surrogate marker of functional enterocyte mass and (2) circulating monocyte-derived macrophage reactivity, before allo-HCT. Forty-seven consecutive patients were prospectively included. Citrulline levels from blood samples withdrawn 30 days before transplantation were assessed using liquid chromatography combined with mass spectrometry. Monocyte-derived macrophages were isolated and incubated with 5 pathogen-associated molecular patterns: lipopolysaccharide, PamCSK4, flagellin, muramyl dipeptide, and curdlan. Multiplex fluorescent immunoassay on culture supernatant assessed levels of TNF-α, IL-1ß, IL-6, and IL-10 in each condition. Citrulline and cytokine levels were analyzed relatively to aGVHD onset within 100 days after transplantation. Citrulline levels were lower in the aGVHD group (n = 20) than in the no-aGVHD group (n = 27) (P = .005). Conversely, IL-6 and IL-10 were greater in aGVHD group, especially after curdlan stimulation (P = .005 and P = .012). Citrulline levels ≤20 µmol/L, IL-6 ≥ 332 pg/mL, and IL-10 ≥ 90 pg/mL were associated with aGVHD development (log-rank test, P = .002, P = .041, and P < .0001, respectively). In multivariate analysis, IL-10 ≥ 90 pg/mL, myeloablative conditioning, and citrulline ≤20 µmol/L remained independent factors of aGVHD development (hazard ratio [HR], 8.18, P = .0003; HR, 4.28, P = .006; and HR, 4.43, P = .01, respectively). Preconditioning citrulline and monocyte-derived macrophage reactivity are objective surrogate markers suitable to identify patients at risk of developing aGVHD. This work highlights the influence of preconditioning status in aGVHD development.


Citrulline/blood , Graft vs Host Disease/diagnosis , Macrophages/immunology , Adult , Aged , Biomarkers/blood , Female , Graft vs Host Disease/etiology , Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation/adverse effects , Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation/methods , Humans , Intestinal Diseases/chemically induced , Intestinal Diseases/microbiology , Lymphocyte Activation/immunology , Macrophages/microbiology , Male , Middle Aged , Monocytes/cytology , Predictive Value of Tests , Transplantation Conditioning/adverse effects , Transplantation Conditioning/methods
13.
Biochimie ; 119: 146-65, 2015 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26542286

Creatine is physiologically provided equally by diet and by endogenous synthesis from arginine and glycine with successive involvements of arginine glycine amidinotransferase [AGAT] and guanidinoacetate methyl transferase [GAMT]. A specific plasma membrane transporter, creatine transporter [CRTR] (SLC6A8), further enables cells to incorporate creatine and through uptake of its precursor, guanidinoacetate, also directly contributes to creatine biosynthesis. Breakthrough in the role of creatine has arisen from studies on creatine deficiency disorders. Primary creatine disorders are inherited as autosomal recessive (mutations affecting GATM [for glycine-amidinotransferase, mitochondrial]) and GAMT genes) or X-linked (SLC6A8 gene) traits. They have highlighted the role of creatine in brain functions altered in patients (global developmental delay, intellectual disability, behavioral disorders). Creatine modulates GABAergic and glutamatergic cerebral pathways, presynaptic CRTR (SLC6A8) ensuring re-uptake of synaptic creatine. Secondary creatine disorders, addressing other genes, have stressed the extraordinary imbrication of creatine metabolism with many other cellular pathways. This high dependence on multiple pathways supports creatine as a cellular sensor, to cell methylation and energy status. Creatine biosynthesis consumes 40% of methyl groups produced as S-adenosylmethionine, and creatine uptake is controlled by AMP activated protein kinase, a ubiquitous sensor of energy depletion. Today, creatine is considered as a potential sensor of cell methylation and energy status, a neurotransmitter influencing key (GABAergic and glutamatergic) CNS neurotransmission, therapeutic agent with anaplerotic properties (towards creatine kinases [creatine-creatine phosphate cycle] and creatine neurotransmission), energetic and antioxidant compound (benefits in degenerative diseases through protection against energy depletion and oxidant species) with osmolyte behavior (retention of water by muscle). This review encompasses all these aspects by providing an illustrated metabolic account for brain and body creatine in health and disease, an algorithm to diagnose metabolic and gene bases of primary and secondary creatine deficiencies, and a metabolic exploration by (1)H-MRS assessment of cerebral creatine levels and response to therapeutic measures.


Amidinotransferases/metabolism , Creatine/metabolism , Guanidinoacetate N-Methyltransferase/metabolism , Nerve Tissue Proteins/metabolism , Plasma Membrane Neurotransmitter Transport Proteins/metabolism , AMP-Activated Protein Kinases/metabolism , Amidinotransferases/deficiency , Amidinotransferases/genetics , Amino Acid Metabolism, Inborn Errors/diagnosis , Amino Acid Metabolism, Inborn Errors/enzymology , Amino Acid Metabolism, Inborn Errors/genetics , Amino Acid Metabolism, Inborn Errors/metabolism , Amino Acid Transport Systems, Basic/deficiency , Amino Acid Transport Systems, Basic/genetics , Amino Acid Transport Systems, Basic/metabolism , Animals , Biological Transport, Active , Brain Diseases, Metabolic, Inborn/diagnosis , Brain Diseases, Metabolic, Inborn/enzymology , Brain Diseases, Metabolic, Inborn/genetics , Brain Diseases, Metabolic, Inborn/metabolism , Creatine/biosynthesis , Creatine/deficiency , Creatine/genetics , Developmental Disabilities/diagnosis , Developmental Disabilities/enzymology , Developmental Disabilities/genetics , Developmental Disabilities/metabolism , Energy Metabolism , Guanidinoacetate N-Methyltransferase/deficiency , Guanidinoacetate N-Methyltransferase/genetics , Gyrate Atrophy/diagnosis , Gyrate Atrophy/enzymology , Gyrate Atrophy/genetics , Gyrate Atrophy/metabolism , Humans , Hyperammonemia/diagnosis , Hyperammonemia/enzymology , Hyperammonemia/genetics , Hyperammonemia/metabolism , Intellectual Disability/diagnosis , Intellectual Disability/enzymology , Intellectual Disability/genetics , Intellectual Disability/metabolism , Language Development Disorders/diagnosis , Language Development Disorders/enzymology , Language Development Disorders/genetics , Language Development Disorders/metabolism , Mental Retardation, X-Linked/diagnosis , Mental Retardation, X-Linked/enzymology , Mental Retardation, X-Linked/genetics , Mental Retardation, X-Linked/metabolism , Methylation , Mitochondrial Membrane Transport Proteins , Movement Disorders/congenital
14.
Glycobiology ; 25(6): 617-31, 2015 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25595949

Helicobacter pylori is a Gram-negative bacterium that colonizes the mucus niche of the gastric mucosa and infects more than half of the world's human population. Chronic infection may cause gastritis, duodenal ulcer, intestinal metaplasia or gastric cancer. In the stomach, H. pylori interacts with O-glycans of gastric mucins but the mechanism by which the bacteria succeed in altering the mucosa remains mainly unknown. To better understand the physiopathology of the infection, inhibitory adhesion assays were performed with various O-glycans expressed by human gastric mucins, and topographic expression of gastric mucins MUC5AC and MUC6 was analyzed for healthy uninfected individuals, for infected asymptomatic individuals and for patients infected by H. pylori and having the incomplete type of intestinal metaplasia. The glycosylation of the gastric mucosa of asymptomatic individuals infected by H. pylori was determined and compared with the glycosylation pattern found for patients with the incomplete type of intestinal metaplasia. Results show that H. pylori manages to modulate host's glycosylation during the course of infection in order to create a favorable niche, whereas asymptomatic infected individuals seem to counteract further steps of infection development by adapting their mucus glycosylation.


Gastric Mucins/metabolism , Helicobacter Infections/metabolism , Helicobacter pylori/metabolism , Glycosylation , Helicobacter Infections/microbiology , Humans
16.
J Infect Dis ; 210(8): 1286-95, 2014 Oct 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24755437

Adhesion of Helicobacter pylori to the gastric mucosa is a necessary prerequisite for the pathogenesis of H. pylori-related diseases. In this study, we investigated the GalNAcß1-4GlcNAc motif (also known as N,N'-diacetyllactosediamine [lacdiNAc]) carried by MUC5AC gastric mucins as the target for bacterial binding to the human gastric mucosa. The expression of LacdiNAc carried by gastric mucins was correlated with H. pylori localization, and all strains tested adhered significantly to this motif. Proteomic analysis and mutant construction allowed the identification of a yet uncharacterized bacterial adhesin, LabA, which specifically recognizes lacdiNAc. These findings unravel a target of adhesion for H. pylori in addition to moieties recognized by the well-characterized adhesins BabA and SabA. Localization of the LabA target, restricted to the gastric mucosa, suggests a plausible explanation for the tissue tropism of these bacteria. These results pave the way for the development of alternative strategies against H. pylori infection, using adherence inhibitors.


Adhesins, Bacterial/metabolism , Bacterial Adhesion/physiology , Gastric Mucosa/microbiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial/physiology , Helicobacter pylori/physiology , Adhesins, Bacterial/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Humans , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Binding , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
17.
Mol Genet Metab ; 110(3): 263-7, 2013 Nov.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24090707

Creatine and guanidinoacetate are biomarkers of creatine metabolism. Their assays in body fluids may be used for detecting patients with primary creatine deficiency disorders (PCDD), a class of inherited diseases. Their laboratory values in blood and urine may vary with age, requiring that reference normal values are given within the age range. Despite the long known role of creatine for muscle physiology, muscle signs are not necessarily the major complaint expressed by PCDD patients. These disorders drastically affect brain function inducing, in patients, intellectual disability, autistic behavior and other neurological signs (delays in speech and language, epilepsy, ataxia, dystonia and choreoathetosis), being a common feature the drop in brain creatine content. For this reason, screening of PCDD patients has been repeatedly carried out in populations with neurological signs. This report is aimed at providing reference laboratory values and related age ranges found for a large scale population of patients with neurological signs (more than 6 thousand patients) previously serving as a background population for screening French patients with PCDD. These reference laboratory values and age ranges compare rather favorably with literature values for healthy populations. Some differences are also observed, and female participants are discriminated from male participants as regards to urine but not blood values including creatine on creatinine ratio and guanidinoacetate on creatinine ratio values. Such gender differences were previously observed in healthy populations; they might be explained by literature differential effects of testosterone and estrogen in adolescents and adults, and by estrogen effects in prepubertal age on SLC6A8 function. Finally, though they were acquired on a population with neurological signs, the present data might reasonably serve as reference laboratory values in any future medical study exploring abnormalities of creatine metabolism and transport.


Creatine/metabolism , Glycine/analogs & derivatives , White People , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Amino Acid Metabolism, Inborn Errors/diagnosis , Amino Acid Metabolism, Inborn Errors/metabolism , Case-Control Studies , Child , Child, Preschool , Creatine/blood , Creatine/urine , Female , France , Glycine/blood , Glycine/metabolism , Glycine/urine , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Middle Aged , Reference Values , Sex Factors , Young Adult
18.
Infect Immun ; 81(10): 3632-43, 2013 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23876800

Mucin glycoproteins are secreted in large amounts by the intestinal epithelium and constitute an efficient component of innate immune defenses to promote homeostasis and protect against enteric pathogens. In this study, our objective was to investigate how the bacterial enteropathogen Shigella flexneri, which causes bacillary dysentery, copes with the mucin defense barrier. We report that upon in vitro infection of mucin-producing polarized human intestinal epithelial cells, virulent S. flexneri manipulates the secretion of gel-forming mucins. This phenomenon, which is triggered only by virulent strains, results in accumulation of mucins at the cell apical surface, leading to the appearance of a gel-like structure that favors access of bacteria to the cell surface and the subsequent invasion process. We identify MUC5AC, a gel-forming mucin, as a component of this structure. Formation of this gel does not depend on modifications of electrolyte concentrations, induction of trefoil factor expression, endoplasmic reticulum stress, or response to unfolded proteins. In addition, transcriptional and biochemical analyses of infected cells reveal modulations of mucin gene expression and modifications of mucin glycosylation patterns, both of which are induced by virulent bacteria in a type III secretion system-dependent manner. Thus, S. flexneri has developed a dedicated strategy to alter the mucus barrier by targeting key elements of the gel-forming capacity of mucins: gene transcription, protein glycosylation, and secretion.


Gels/chemistry , Gene Expression Regulation/immunology , Mucins/metabolism , Shigella flexneri/pathogenicity , Electrolytes , Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress , HT29 Cells , Humans , Mucins/chemistry , Peptides/genetics , Peptides/metabolism , Trefoil Factor-2 , Virulence
19.
BMC Biol ; 11: 61, 2013 May 21.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23692866

BACKGROUND: The intestinal mucus layer plays a key role in the maintenance of host-microbiota homeostasis. To document the crosstalk between the host and microbiota, we used gnotobiotic models to study the influence of two major commensal bacteria, Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, on this intestinal mucus layer. B. thetaiotaomicron is known to use polysaccharides from mucus, but its effect on goblet cells has not been addressed so far. F. prausnitzii is of particular physiological importance because it can be considered as a sensor and a marker of human health. We determined whether B. thetaiotaomicron affected goblet cell differentiation, mucin synthesis and glycosylation in the colonic epithelium. We then investigated how F. prausnitzii influenced the colonic epithelial responses to B. thetaiotaomicron. RESULTS: B. thetaiotaomicron, an acetate producer, increased goblet cell differentiation, expression of mucus-related genes and the ratio of sialylated to sulfated mucins in mono-associated rats. B. thetaiotaomicron, therefore, stimulates the secretory lineage, favoring mucus production. When B. thetaiotaomicron was associated with F. prausnitzii, an acetate consumer and a butyrate producer, the effects on goblet cells and mucin glycosylation were diminished. F. prausnitzii, by attenuating the effects of B. thetaiotaomicron on mucus, may help the epithelium to maintain appropriate proportions of different cell types of the secretory lineage. Using a mucus-producing cell line, we showed that acetate up-regulated KLF4, a transcription factor involved in goblet cell differentiation. CONCLUSIONS: B. thetaiotaomicron and F. prausnitzii, which are metabolically complementary, modulate, in vivo, the intestinal mucus barrier by modifying goblet cells and mucin glycosylation. Our study reveals the importance of the balance between two main commensal bacteria in maintaining colonic epithelial homeostasis via their respective effects on mucus.


Bacteroides/physiology , Colon/microbiology , Goblet Cells/microbiology , Intestinal Mucosa/microbiology , Mucus/metabolism , Polysaccharides/biosynthesis , Ruminococcus/physiology , Acetates/metabolism , Animals , Bacteroides/ultrastructure , Bacteroides Infections/microbiology , Bacteroides Infections/pathology , Cell Differentiation , Colon/metabolism , Colon/pathology , Disease Models, Animal , Gene Expression Regulation , Germ-Free Life , Glycosylation , Goblet Cells/metabolism , Goblet Cells/pathology , Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections/microbiology , Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections/pathology , HT29 Cells , Host-Pathogen Interactions/genetics , Humans , Intestinal Mucosa/metabolism , Intestinal Mucosa/pathology , Kruppel-Like Factor 4 , Mucus/microbiology , Rats , Signal Transduction , Time Factors
20.
Orphanet J Rare Dis ; 7: 96, 2012 Dec 13.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23234264

A population of patients with unexplained neurological symptoms from six major French university hospitals was screened over a 28-month period for primary creatine disorder (PCD). Urine guanidinoacetate (GAA) and creatine:creatinine ratios were measured in a cohort of 6,353 subjects to identify PCD patients and compile their clinical, 1H-MRS, biochemical and molecular data. Six GAMT [N-guanidinoacetatemethyltransferase (EC 2.1.1.2)] and 10 X-linked creatine transporter (SLC6A8) but no AGAT (GATM) [L-arginine/glycine amidinotransferase (EC 2.1.4.1)] deficient patients were identified in this manner. Three additional affected sibs were further identified after familial inquiry (1 brother with GAMT deficiency and 2 brothers with SLC6A8 deficiency in two different families). The prevalence of PCD in this population was 0.25% (0.09% and 0.16% for GAMT and SLC6A8 deficiencies, respectively). Seven new PCD-causing mutations were discovered (2 nonsense [c.577C > T and c.289C > T] and 1 splicing [c.391 + 15G > T] mutations for the GAMT gene and, 2 missense [c.1208C > A and c.926C > A], 1 frameshift [c.930delG] and 1 splicing [c.1393-1G > A] mutations for the SLC6A8 gene). No hot spot mutations were observed in these genes, as all the mutations were distributed throughout the entire gene sequences and were essentially patient/family specific. Approximately one fifth of the mutations of SLC6A8, but not GAMT, were attributed to neo-mutation, germinal or somatic mosaicism events. The only SLC6A8-deficient female patient in our series presented with the severe phenotype usually characterizing affected male patients, an observation in agreement with recent evidence that is in support of the fact that this X-linked disorder might be more frequent than expected in the female population with intellectual disability.


Creatine/deficiency , Creatine/urine , Nervous System Diseases/etiology , Creatinine/urine , Female , Glycine/analogs & derivatives , Glycine/urine , Humans , Male , Nerve Tissue Proteins/genetics , Nervous System Diseases/urine , Plasma Membrane Neurotransmitter Transport Proteins/genetics , Retrospective Studies
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